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Paul McNamara

Here's why you can't find a domain name

By Paul McNamara on Fri, 04/28/06 - 8:57am.

Chances are good that you've never heard of the add/drop scheme, so dubbed by GoDaddy CEO Bob Parsons. But if you've recently struggled to find a decent .com domain name or paid a king's ransom to regain control of one your organization forgot to renew, the chances are also good that you have been victimized by this growing blight.

Adding insult to injury, it's all legal and within the rules as set by ICANN - a situation that needs to change. Parsons provides more detail than I'll get into here in this post to his blog.

At the heart of the add/drop scheme is a seemingly reasonable five-day grace period that domain registries allow all customers: Claim a name and you've got five days to kick it back into the pool without having incurred a penny of expense - your deposit money is returned in full. It was originally seen as a way to guard against buyer's remorse, simple mistakes and fraudulent registrations.

What's happened is that the grace period has spawned one of those Internet "businesses" where the clever - some might call them the unscrupulous - swoop in to skim off profits without adding anything meaningful in the way of value. The add/drop schemers are locking up millions of .com domain names every day, wringing five days worth of revenue from them via a handful of sub-schemes, and then kicking back all but a tiny fraction just before the grace period expires. ... Think of it as Internet strip mining.

The numbers parsed by Parsons are nothing short of astonishing:

-- At any given moment, about 3.5 million domain names are tied up in add/drop limbo instead of being made available to the businesses and individuals who would otherwise claim and use them;

-- During the week of March 27 to April 2, for example, fully 92% of the approximately 5.4 million names registered were returned for a full refund - and 99% of the returns came from add/drop players.

-- The number of grace-period .com drops increased 15-fold from March 2005 (1.85 million) to March 2006 (27.7 million).

The trend should be setting off alarm bells throughout the Internet industry, says Peter Alguacil, an analyst at Ipwalk, which tracks statistical trends on the 'Net. He has whipped up a telling graph that captures the rise visually.

"If this is allowed to continue, within a year, more than 60 million domain names will be added and dropped every month. Almost all of these domain names will be part of the add/drop scheme," Alguacil says. "This will cause enormous costs for registries and make legitimate domain name business close to impossible."

GoDaddy's Parsons says the answer to the problem is actually quite simple, albeit perhaps easier said than done. His proposed solution is to simply make non-refundable a 25-cent deposit on domain names that is already paid to ICANN every time a registration sticks beyond five days. The theory here is the same as with anti-spam measures that seek to make everyone put some skin in the game; under those conditions those who aren't providing any real value cannot expect to reap any return. Instead, they will quit the game.

"There is a small problem with this approach," Parsons concedes. "ICANN is a consensus-based organization and of course, many registrars are participating in the add/drop scheme. It will be interesting to see how ICANN steps up to handle this problem now that it is in the light."

I put the question to ICANN. A public relations representative promised me an e-mail response or an interview with an ICANN official yesterday, but as of this writing Friday morning neither has arrived.

Whether the organization adopts Parsons' proposal or conjures up a fix of its own, this much appears to be certain: Someone's got to put a stop to this nonsense.

There's another simple

0

There's another simple solution to this problem. Limit the number of times an individual or organization is given the five-day grace period each year. ONCE would seem reasonable for an individual, perhaps 10 for a company or other organization. To enforce this, ICANN can set up a website where registries can place information on every entity which add/drops a domain name. To cushion the shock and alleviate problems, perhaps the grace period could be extended to 10 days or a fortnight. It would seem that businesses, especially registries, chambers of commerce and even governments would far outnumber the few who benefit from this scheme.

Debate the rebate

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Seems like the process needs a "registration fee" that is charged to effect the registration and hence is not refundable.

As for the domain costs, collect the cash up front and have the droppers send in a rebate form (issued after cash collection) to get their money back which may take 8 weeks or so... maybe more (elapsed time) for corporate accounts.

Easy solution

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There really is an easy solution, but there are probably too many insiders making money off of the abuse for it to happen any time soon.

Allow registrants to waive the AGP.

If the registrant opts to waive the AGP, they can access and utilize the new domain instantly. If the registrant does not waive the AGP, they can access and utilize the new domain after the 5 day grace period. There is no compelling reason that an applicant who wished to employ the AGP would need instant access to their domain.

Easy ... and brilliant

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It took me way too many times reading that post to understand why it would work, but now I'm thinking it might be the best of all the "quick fixes" I've seen so far. Jacamo seems spot-on to me: If you're unsure of your registration, then you can't have any reasonable need to use the name immediately; fine, here's your grace period and you can access the name once the grace period expires (and your fee is nonrefundable). Conversely, if you have a legitimate need to to use the name immediately (as opposed to an exploitive one), you have no need for a grace period and won't mind waiving it. ... Anyone see any holes? ... He's also right that the people who could fix this apparently see a feature where the rest of us see a problem.

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